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that he knows Danville is also fighting that requirement, so he encourages that both <br />become as one community and fight this requirement as much as possible, but at the <br />same time have a balanced approach looking at the entire Pleasanton as a city and not <br />just looking at East Pleasanton. He noted that it was mentioned that going through the <br />East Pleasanton neighborhood should not look like it the multi - family units are <br />concentrated in one area, and he would like to extend that same thought to the entire <br />Pleasanton, such that when he drives through Pleasanton, he should not see only <br />multi -unit homes concentrated in one area. He requested the Planning Commission to <br />consider that. <br />Mr. Ahluwalia stated that he has similar concerns that his neighbors and friends have <br />already mentioned, the biggest of which is traffic. He recalled that when the Ironwood <br />community was approved, people living on the north side objected to their community <br />saying it would increase the traffic on Mohr Avenue, even though now their community <br />has two parts, Ironwood Classics and Ironwood Estates, and Ironwood Classics cannot <br />use Mohr Avenue even though some of the children go to Mohr Elementary School and <br />have to go around because there are blocks in the middle of the road. He questioned <br />the Planning experts about how 2,000 homes cannot create a traffic problem on Stanley <br />Blvd. and Valley Avenue if the 100+ homes in the Ironwood Classics create a traffic <br />problem. <br />Mr. Ahluwalia stated that schools is a very big concern for him and for everyone else. <br />He noted that as Ms. Testa mentioned, people live here because they have children and <br />want good schools, such that even if he has to drive 42 miles to work in Palo Alto, he <br />prefers living here because it is a good community and the schools are good. He noted <br />that everyone knows the budget is shrinking as class sizes are increasing, and with the <br />2,000 homes here plus another 500 approved somewhere else and with no plan to <br />increase school funding, the Pleasanton that was envisioned before will be lost; it may <br />become like Dublin, and no one wants that to happen to Pleasanton. He stated that he <br />and his wife are looking at more houses here so they can retire here, and if these are <br />the kinds of developments that will happen, he thinks that they will have to move out of <br />here. <br />Mr. Ahluwalia also expressed concern about vandalism in their common areas, <br />especially the pool. He indicated that the police reports will show how many times they <br />have called the police because there are people inside the pool after 9:00 p.m. when it <br />closes. He noted that with this additional 2,000 homes being built around here, he is <br />really concerned about that too. <br />Finally, Mr. Ahluwalia stated that he was listening to the discussion about the 7- Eleven <br />project and he heard the Planning Commission suggest that the owner reach out to the <br />community. He encouraged the Commission to think about some kind of outreach for <br />their community as well, because they get these yellow notification cards in the mail and <br />he thinks 99 percent of the people just do not read it and do not know what is going on. <br />He stated that he walked on their street to ten different homes and asked them if they <br />read this and they said no, and when he told them about the letter that was sent to the <br />PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES, September 25, 2013 Page 32 of 45 <br />